4.7 Article

Phosphoproteomic quantitation and causal analysis reveal pathways in GPVI/ITAM-mediated platelet activation programs

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 136, Issue 20, Pages 2346-2358

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020005496

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Funding

  1. Medical Research Foundation of Oregon
  2. American Heart Association [17SDG33350075]
  3. American Society of Hematology
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01HL146549, R01HL101972]
  5. NIH, National Eye Institute [P30 EY010572]
  6. NIH, National Cancer Institute [P30 CA069533]
  7. Office of the Director [S10OD-012246]

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Platelets engage cues of pending vascular injury through coordinated adhesion, secretion, and aggregation responses. These rapid, progressive changes in platelet form and function are orchestrated downstream of specific receptors on the platelet surface and through intracellular signaling mechanisms that remain systematically undefined. This study brings together cell physiological and phosphoproteomics methods to profile signaling mechanisms downstream of the immunotyrosine activation motif (ITAM) platelet collagen receptor GPVI. Peptide tandem mass tag (TMT) labeling, sample multiplexing, synchronous precursor selection (SPS), and triple stage tandem mass spectrometry (MS3) detected 0.05) phosphorylation events on 1300 proteins over conditions initiating and progressing GPVI-mediated platelet activation. With literature-guided causal inference tools, >300 site-specific signaling relations were mapped from phosphoproteomics data among key and emerging GPVI effectors (ie, FcRg, Syk, PLCg2, PKCd, DAPP1). Through signaling validation studies and functional screening, other less-characterized targets were also considered within the context of GPVI/ITAM pathways, including Ras/MAPK axis proteins (ie, KSR1, SOS1, STAT1, Hsp27). Highly regulated GPVI/ITAM targets out of context of curated knowledge were also illuminated, including a system of >40 Rab GTPases and associated regulatory proteins, where GPVI-mediated Rab7 S72 phosphorylation and endolysosomal maturation were blocked by TAK1 inhibition. In addition to serving as a model for generating and testing hypotheses from omics datasets, this study puts forth a means to identify hemostatic effectors, biomarkers, and therapeutic targets relevant to thrombosis, vascular inflammation, and other platelet-associated disease states. (Blood. 2020;136(20):2346-2358)

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